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At a campaign rally in Hyderabad on Sunday, 2 December, UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath stoked controversy yet again by promising the renaming of Hyderabad as ‘Bhagyanagar’.
While the politics behind his statements are clear, the folklore behind it has intrigued city-based historians for a long time. Social media is rife with jokes on renaming the Hyderabadi Biriyani and the city’s slang-filled Hindi dialect, but historians feel it is time for a serious brush-up of history.
According to the legend, the city was then named 'Bhagyanagar' after the dancer, and when she married the king and converted to Islam, she took the name of Hyder Mahal, after which the city is presently named.
However, according to some city-based historians, Bhagmati is only a figment of the imagination of certain writers.
They argue that there is no evidence to suggest that Bhagmati ever existed. Speaking to TNM, Mohammad Safiullah, a historian and cultural advisor to the Nizam Trust, says that the proponents of the ‘legend’ have not been able to produce substantial evidence to prove the existence of the queen.
“History is based on hard facts and material evidence. There are no manuscripts, miniatures, inscriptions, coins, or tombs and graves of that period (16th century) which can be attributed to the existence of the mythical damsel. Till date, only two contemporary miniatures, from the 18th and 19th century, have been produced in the name of evidence to support the existence of the mythical and nearly alien ‘Bhagmati’,” Safiullah says.
Safiuallah is currently writing a book titled ‘Forever Hyderabad’ that has a detailed 100-page description on the naming of the Hyderabad city in the last quarter of the 16th century, he says.
“There were so many non-Muslim women who got married to the rulers of the Qutub Shahi dynasty in the 16th century. There was Bhagyavathi from the Vijayanagara kingdom who got married to Ibrahim Qutub Shah. Saramma got married to Abdullah Qutub Shah, whose burial still remains in the royal metropolis. We have Taramati, Premavati and a host of other Hindu women who lived during the Qutub Shahi era. We have material evidence of their existence in history,” he says.
While there are historians who believe that Bhagmati is a fictional character, some choose to differ and say that there is evidence for the existence of the queen; but the city of Hyderabad was not named after her, they say.
“The city, during the Qutub Shahi period was called Bhagnagar, where ‘Bhag’ is an equivalent for ‘Bhagya’, in the Muslim lexicon. ‘Bhag’ meant good fortune, just like ‘Bhagya.’”
There are other myths about the city’s name. One argues that it came from its Shia rulers who were worshippers of Prophet Ali, who is also known as ‘Haider’.
However, Hyderabad-based playwright Mohammad Ali Baig, whose famous play ‘Dilon-ka-Shehzaada’ revolves around the love story of Quli Qutub Shah and Bhagamti, says that none of this should matter today.
“One person making a few absurd claims cannot throw an entire city out of mind,” he said.
(This article has been produced in an association with The News Minute)
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